Michael O'Neill
Jul 12, 2010

Lowe appoints Rupen Desai as president for Southeast Asia

SINGAPORE - Lowe & Partners has appointed Rupen Desai to the newly created role of president for Southeast Asia in a move the agency says represents a statement of its intentions in the region.

Rupen Desai, president, Lowe Worldwide, Southeast Asia
Rupen Desai, president, Lowe Worldwide, Southeast Asia

The role will see Desai, currently the network's operating director for Unilever's worldwide business, focus on all Southeast Asia-Pacific territories, including Australia and New Zealand but excluding China and India.

Desai's role will extend to include leadership of the Lowe Singapore office.

Desai will also retain his leadership role on the network's Unilever business. Lowe is Unilever's biggest agency, handling over 20 key Unilever brands globally.

Lowe & Partners chairman Tony Wright said Desai's promotion would further strengthen the presence Lowe has in the region.

"We are already amongst the top five agencies in most countries in this region," he said. "However, our reputation as a regional network has been very small. Lowe has been a well-kept secret for too long. We want to make a statement that we are fully in the game as a large and powerful regional agency."

With over 15 years within Lowe, Desai's experience has spanned across large multinational clients, including Unilever, InBev, J&J, HSBC, Columbia Tri-Star and Nokia. He has been based in Lowe offices in India, UAE, Lebanon and Thailand. Currently based in Singapore, he will continue to direct Lowe teams across the Unilever Asia business.

When we decided we needed stronger regional leadership, it seemed right for us to take the person who has been the best activator of our business across the region and that was Rupen," said Wright.

"Rupen is a proven leader across the region on behalf of our clients, our agencies and our work," added Lowe & Partners CEO Michael Wall.  "Lowe has a competitive and compelling footprint in Asia and we believe Rupen can help us build on this strong foundation as we look to accelerate our growth and capabilities."

 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

15 hours ago

Spikes Asia 2025: Rika Komakine and Tetsuya Honda ...

A Japanese PR agency and their client cooked up a Spikes Asia Award-winning campaign by tackling a common cooking complaint—sticky gyoza. This is how they did it.

16 hours ago

Meta could soon be the largest misinformation ...

The tech company’s recent changes could result in a surge in unmoderated and unfortunate content, underscoring the need for advertisers to again be mindful about where they spend their dollars, writes Sarah Thompson.

17 hours ago

WPP mandates four days per week in office

The change to the global guidelines will apply across WPP's operations.

19 hours ago

Why Meta’s pivot on fact-checking is the right move

This course correction is not merely expedient; it’s the right move for Meta, its shareholders, advertisers, and audiences alike, argues Ramakrishnan Raja in his forthright analysis.